Bangladesh strike back but locals hold upper hand

The Northern Territory Chief Minister’s XI lost three wickets for five runs late on the second day to leave Bangladesh with a slim hope of reviving their fortunes after another poor batting performance. At stumps the Chief Minister’s XI were were 32 for 3, with an overall lead of 82. Unless the Bangladesh bowlers cause more havoc early on the third day, their batsmen will be left with a daunting fourth-innings target.Manjural Islam, the left-arm seam bowler, caused the early problems for the Chief Minister’s XI when he had Nick Berry out for a duck in the first over of the second innings. Then, in his third, he took the key wicket of Michael Clarke for 1. In between Islam’s two wickets, Ian Redpath was bowled by the medium-fast bowler Mashrafe Mortaza for a duck in Mortaza’s first over.Ashley Williams and Kenneth Vowles stopped the rot and were unbeaten on 13 and 16 respectively at the close. The slow portable pitch made runscoring extremely difficult, so the first-innings lead of 50 conceded by Bangladesh could well prove to be a crucial factor.Bangladesh struggled throughout their innings to make any impact against a side which is not even a first-class combination. They were bowled out for 139 – hardly the ideal preparation in the last match before their first Test on Australian soil.Hannan Sarker was the sole figure of defiance. He batted 128 minutes for his 34 – the top score of the innings – but in doing so he highlighted the battle with concentration that the Bangladesh players have had ever since making their appearance on the Test stage. Nurtured on one-day cricket, they have still to acquire the temperament to play consistently long innings.At lunch Bangladesh were 56 for 3, but they had slumped to 120 for 8 by tea. Alok Kapali scored 21 and the last pair offered some token resistance, but it was too little against an attack which played to the conditions perfectly. Eight bowlers were used by Northern Territory, and while he picked up only one wicket for seven runs, Brian McAdam, the former North Melbourne AFL player, bowled 10 overs for that.Bradley Hatton took 2 for 20 off his 12 overs of medium-pace, while the Australian one-day offspinner Nathan Hauritz took 2 for 32 from 21 overs.Day 1 Bulletin

Records fall as Australia break the Namibian dream

What started out as a dream turned into a nightmare as the Australia’s clinical opening bowler, Glenn McGrath, took seven for 15 to demolish the Namibian batting, bowling them out for 45 in 14 overs and ensuring a win by 256 runs on a good batting pitch at the North West Stadium in Potchefstroom.McGrath wrote his name into the record books. It is the best return in all World Cups (previous: 7/51 WW Davis, West Indies v Australia at Leeds, 1983). It is the best bowling by an Australian in an one-day international (previous: 6/14 GJ Gilmour v England at Leeds, 1975), and he became the leading wicket-taker for Australia in all World Cups (previous: SK Warne 32 wickets). A truly remarkable and historic performance.The 45 all out equals the second-lowest total in World Cup history, while the 256-run win becomes the biggest margin of victory in all one-day internationals, beating the 245-run win Sri Lanka had over India in Sharjah, 2000/01. England’s 202-run win over India at Lord’s in 1975 was the previous biggest victory margin in the World Cup.Australia’s win was also their 11th consecutive victory, equalling the recordfor most consecutive victories in one-day internationals, held by West Indies.The pace of Brett Lee and the guile of McGrath were something that theWorld Cup debutantes would never before have encountered. Lee, bowling wellinto the 150 kph, was just a yard too fast and the movement and line fromMcGrath proved unplayable as wickets continued to fall.A third-ball four off McGrath from Jan-Berry Burger got the Namibian innings off the ground, but the fourth found the edge of the shuffling Burger’s bat to give Ponting a simple waist-high catch at second slip.Brett Lee was quick, bowling well into the 150-kph zone, swinging the ball away, with Adam Gilchrist standing well back. Stephan Swanepoel found the pace too much for him, and an edge duly came in the third over, a flyer with Ricky Ponting taking a great catch way above his head at second slip.Morne Karg did not last long, getting a lifter from McGrath that he gloved away for Adam Gilchrist to do the rest. Karg may have been unlucky, as it did notlook as if his hand was on the bat when he gloved it.Bryan Murgatroyd was trapped leg-before by McGrath without scoring, and Danie Keulder, on three, gave McGrath his fourth, again a regulation catch to Gilchrist off a faint edge. Deon Kotze was McGrath’s fifth, also edging to Gilchrist.McGrath’s sixth wicket, and Australia’s seventh, was another edge as Louis Kotze followed the procession. Bjorn Kotze had his bails dislodged as McGrath became only the second World Cup player to take seven wickets in an innings.Andy Bichel replaced Lee and struck first over up, having Melt van Schoorcaught by Gilchrist and wrapped it up also having Rudi van Vuuren caughtbehind. Six catches by Gilchrist gave him the most by a wicket-keeper in a World Cup match.Namibia had been bowled out for 45 in 14 overs that took 75 minutes.For 43 overs in the morning session Namibia had however done a sterling job.They bowled well, with the exception of van Vuuren, going for 92 in 10overs, and fielded with more pride than many of the teams in the tournament.They chased down and brought off diving saves that not only helped the bowlers but added a little pressure on the Australians.Matthew Hayden was again magnificent. He paced his innings well after Gilchrist had been bowled for 13, upping the rate the longer he stayed at the crease. Three big sixes and nine fours helped him to 88, his highest World Cup score, before he was bowled trying to work the ball across the line.Michael Bevan, apart from one glorious cover drive, found it difficult topierce the field and became the first wicket of Louis Burger, deceived by a slower ball to be caught and bowled for 17.The hard-hitting Andrew Symonds was again impressive. Two fours and twosixes in an innings of 59, which would have been a lot more but for the excellent fielding and a ridiculous run-out that had him and Damien Martyn running for the same end. The 84-run partnership is a record for the fifth wicket on this ground.Apart from this aberration, Martyn showed the Namibians what running between the wickets means. Almost unnoticeably he ran his way to 35 before he was bowled, setting the stage for Darren Lehmann.Lehmann and Brad Hogg came together at the end of the 43rd over with Namibiahaving done extremely well to restrict Australia to 231/6, but a seven-over onslaught from Lehmann saw Australia finish on 301/6 with his 50 coming off 31 balls. The undefeated 70-run partnership is also a record for the ground. The last over had brought 28 runs to Lehmann, a record for a single over in a World Cup match and for Australia in all ODIs.For Namibia, Louis Burger returned his best international figures of 3/39while Gilchrist was Burton van Rooi’s first international wicket.

Sri Lanka can go all the way

So we meet again. Cricket-crazy India and cricket-mad Sri Lanka – two nations separated by the Palk Straits but joined by our great love of the game. Monday’s encounter at Wanderers promises to be a fantastic spectacle and all of us in the Sri Lankan camp are eagerly looking forward to the challenge.India, under New Zealand’s shrewd coach John Wright and skippered by Sourav Ganguly, are a stronger side these days.Until recently, they were infuriatingly inconsistent despite being blessed with prodigious talent. Their woeful record in the finals reflected their tendency to crumble under pressure. This meant you knew that if you dismissed Sachin Tendulkar cheaply, then, India rarely came back into the game.

© Reuters

Not anymore.If early wickets fall, then, they have the rock-solid Rahul Dravid and the exciting Yuvraj Singh to rescue them. This helps them bounce back even after a poor start.The same is true of their bowling. In this World Cup, they have a balanced attack. There is the experienced Javagal Srinath, the fast-improving Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra, a left-armer who has proved a revelation. In Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble, meanwhile, they boast two world-class spinners.The team as a whole appears fitter, better prepared and, after a hesitant start, are growing steadily confident. Yes, they struggled on the moist pitches during their recent tour to New Zealand, but here in South Africa they are clearly a more consistent team.Their biggest strength is their explosive batting line-up, which contains players capable of batting any side in the world out of the game on their day. I still remember our game at Taunton in the last World Cup when I was working as a commentator: Ganguly and Dravid, then, were sensational.Thus, we are under no illusions about the immensity of the challenge ahead. To beat India we will certainly have to be at the top of our game: a loose start by the opening bowlers and it could all be over in a flash.We are a different side than India: a bit steadier. In an ideal world, I think we would like to bat first and build a decent total. After achieving that, we must also bowl very, very tightly and put their batsmen under as much pressure as possible. The key is simple; we will have to do the basics well.The little master is obviously a major threat. The tournament’s highest run-getter by a distance, Tendulkar carries their batting. Although India may now be less dependent upon his talents than they earlier were, there is no doubt that his will be the prized wicket.He can be phenomenal. I watched his innings closely the other day against Pakistan. It was brilliant, quite brilliant. His crisp footwork, perfect balance and impeccable shot selection were a joy to watch and an example for any budding cricketer.We have watched videos and analysed him. We do that for all opponents. Theories have been formulated and strategies discussed. We have an idea of where we want to bowl to him. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to tell you that he possesses few obvious weaknesses. This means the bowlers and the fielders are going to have to work very hard to make sure that we claim his wicket early.But whilst Tendulkar is undoubtedly a great player and a major threat, we will not let our preparations be dominated by him alone. This Indian side possesses an abundance of talent and we would only underestimate the others at our peril.

© Reuters

Moreover, the Sri Lankan philosophy is to focus on what we have to do as individuals. We do not allow ourselves to be distracted by the reputation of the opposition. Each individual has a defined role and responsibilities. We try to make the game simple and reduce the pressure.Unlike India, we are not packed with stars: our strength is teamwork. It is this quality of ours that makes me believe this Sri Lankan side can go all the way. After difficult tours of South Africa and Australia, we have adjusted to the conditions. All the heartache has proved worthwhile. Ironically, our only failure against Kenya was on the slowest pitch that we have played on. Confidence is growing steadily but it has not peaked. There is plenty more petrol in the tank.The Kenya defeat was a setback, costing us valuable Super-Six points. Losing the game placed the players under real pressure in the next two encounters. The matches against West Indies and South Africa were, then, a major test of character, one we passed with flying colours.Our loss to favourites Australia in our first Super Six match proved a slight dampener. But the fact that they have lost key players means Ricky Ponting’s men are far from unbeatable. Jason Gillespie started the tournament in brilliant form and, although his replacement Andrew Bichel had his day in the sun against the English, the former will be missed. The absence of Shane Warne has barely been noticed thus far, but it was always in the final rounds that he was going to be needed the most.Thus, despite all the pre-tournament predictions that sub-continental sides would not prosper this time, I feel that both India and Sri Lanka have the talent and mental strength to become world champions once more. We will know more after Monday.

Gillespie to miss Orange Boxing Day Test match, Brad Williams drafted in

Australian fast bowler Jason Gillespie has been ruled out of the Orange Boxing Day Test match against South Africa at the MCG with an injury to his right shoulder.He will be replaced in the squad by the uncapped Western Australian fast bowler Brad Williams.Gillespie experienced soreness in his shoulder while bowling during the second innings of the first Orange Test match in Adelaide.He responded well to initial treatment, but further examination and bowling after Jason arrived in Melbourne indicated there was still a problem and the decision was taken to pull him out of the match.Jason Gillespie said: “I’m shattered.”I feel I could bowl my first spell okay but I wasn’t completely sure if I could come back after that.”This is such an important Test match and I was keen not to let any of the guys down so it was the sensible decision to step down,” he added.Gillespie underwent scans on Monday afternoon that cleared the South Australian fast bowler of any significant injury.He will remain in Melbourne during the Orange Boxing Day Test match, receiving treatment from Australian team physiotherapist Errol Alcott.A decision on Gillespie’s availability for the Orange Test match in Sydney, starting on 2 January 2002 will be taken in due course.27 year-old Williams took 65 wickets in 23 matches for Victoria before moving to WA for the 1999-2000 season. He captured 50 first-class wickets at 23.02 in his first summer in Perth before injury limited him to three matches in 2000-01, with a return of nine victims at 24.44.This season, in four matches, Williams has taken 17 first-class wickets at 27.24.Brad Williams said: “I found out I’d been called up when my WA team-mate Ryan Campbell came to see me.”He only lives up the street and no-one could get hold of me so he called by to give me the news, the best Christmas present I could ever have.”No words can really describe this. It’s just a dream come true and I almost broke into tears when I heard the news.”I’ve had a few injuries but this just makes all the hard work worthwhile.”I’m really happy with my rhythm at the moment and felt as good as I have for a long while in the ING Cup match against the Bushrangers at the MCG yesterday.”I’ve spoken to Trevor Hohns and he’s told me they’ll decide on the final eleven once I get to Melbourne, but at the moment just being in the twelve is fantastic.”

Katich dines on WA in Pura Cup thriller

NEWCASTLE, NSW, Jan 26 AAP – Simon Katich went out to dinner with his former West Australian teammates last night and then dined out on them today as NSW won a thrilling Pura Cup match in Newcastle.Katich, who left WA for NSW in the off-season, picked up career-best figures of 5-45 as the Warriors lost the unlosable at Newcastle’s No.1 Sports Ground in one of the most memorable Pura Cup matches in recent years.Cruising at 4-272, only 27 runs short of their victory target of 299, the Warriors lost captain Justin Langer for 38 and the rest of the side followed for the addition of only 24 runs, gifting NSW a stunning two run victory and Pura Cup survival.Test captain Steve Waugh described it as one of the best state matches he’d played in and one of the best victories he’d ever been associated with.High praise indeed from a 37-year-old with more than 150 Test matches, 73 Sheffield Shield/Pura Cup games and many more one day matches on his resume.”It’s as good as any state match I have played in for a win. It was one of the best wins I have been a part of full stop,” Waugh said.”At 4-270 we were in a bit of trouble. The game was 95 per cent in their favour.”The Blues owed a debt of gratitude to Katich, whose decision to leave WA still makes Langer bristle.The former Test batsman, who was best man at Michael Hussey’s wedding, remains good friends with several Warriors players and shared dinner with them last night.But today he was breaking partnerships not bread as he ripped the spine out of the WA’s batting order.His left-arm wrist spin, without a wicket in Pura Cup this season, sparked a stunning WA collapse and ensured NSW (24 points) would remain hot on the heels of second-placed Victoria (28).”I think my best before this was about 3-20 which I burgled on the Ashes tour,” Katich said today.”A few things went my way today and it was a phenomenal game of cricket.”The whole week has been strange for me. A lot of them are my good mates.”You always feel if you can get at the tail of a team it may put pressure on them. If you can bowl a couple of maidens panic can set in.”He was right.In a thrilling finale, Katich had Langer caught by Stuart MacGill at cover off a rank long-hop and Callum Thorp (0) out lbw with the score on 272.MacGill, who took 5-112 and match figures of 9-212, then chimed in to have Matthew Nicholson (2) caught by Stuart Clark with the score on 275 before Greg Mail took an amazing reflex catch off the dangerous Hussey (26) at silly mid-off as Katich removed another batsman on the same score.Beau Casson and Jo Angel (9) added 17 before MacGill had the latter caught by Doug Bollinger seven runs short of the target.MacGill then completed the remarkable victory when Casson (8), with three runs short of victory and with only five balls remaining in the day’s play, attempted to get them all in one swing of the bat but only succeeded in sending the ball down the throat of Michael Clarke.”I am really relieved and pleased and excited but still getting over the stress. I have to mention Katich,” MacGill said.”When he came to NSW I identified him as the second best spin bowler in NSW by head and shoulders. He’s got the potential to be a great all rounder for Australia.”Clarke produced another eye catching batting display this morning for NSW to help set up the victory target, finishing on 116 after savaging the WA attack.He took 13 off one over from fast bowler Michael Clark before unleashing on Nicholson, pulling the former Test paceman for six over mid-wicket.Mark Waugh offered valuable support, finishing not out on 83 off only 113 balls as NSW declared for 5-316.

Tuffey in doubt for rest of tour, Drum to act as cover

New Zealand Cricket’s injury curse has struck again with Daryl Tuffey the victim this time.The big fast bowler who made such a fine impression last year when required to fill in for more experienced bowlers who had injury problems, has had a long wait for a Test opportunity on this tour but has suffered a strained hamstring and is to be covered by Auckland pace bowler Chris Drum.Drum will fly to Perth tomorrow to be cover for the CLEAR Black Caps in Perth for the third Test.While Drum will be contesting a Test place with the more favoured Chris Martin it is reward for Drum who impressed last year before suffering a cruel broken collarbone when fielding during the second Test against Pakistan at Jade Stadium in Christchurch.New Zealand manager Jeff Crowe said it was a sad blow for Tuffey.”Daryl’s been waiting for his chance on this tour and I have to say I really feel for the guy,” he said.The selectors preferred Chris Drum over Wellington’s James Franklin because of his ability to bowl into the wind.New Zealand’s chairman of selectors Sir Richard Hadlee, who is in Hobart, said: “If required we think Chris Drum, rather than James Franklin, is the better option for bowling extended spells into the wind.”In Perth the wind tends to blow down the ground.”Tuffey will not bowl again in the second Test and will most likely require a runner when batting.His injury will be reassessed tomorrow and a decision will then be made as to whether he is fit enough to be in contention to play in the third Test.If not, he will return home at the end of this Test.

Southern Premier League youngsters fairing well in Australia

BAT Sports all-rounder Damian Shirazi, recently named Southern Electric ECB Premier League Young Cricketer of the Year, is honing his skills “down under” in Sydney under the watchful eye of established Australian Test stars Geoff Lawson and Michael Slater.The Test pair are colleagues of Shirazi’s at the University of New South Wales Sydney Grade club, where the promising BAT all-rounder is spending the winter.Shirazi, who has hit a century and two half-centuries since linking up with Sydney-based BAT team-mate Dave Carson, has already picked up some bowling tips from Lawson, who spearheaded Australia’s attack in 46 Test matches in the 1980s.”Geoff is in charge of coaching at the club and has helped me quite a lot with my bowling,” explained Shirazi, who took 3-29 with his medium-pacers in a recent Sydney Second Grade match.”We don’t see that much of Michael Slater, because he’s away playing for the New South Wales State side most of the time.”But, when he comes back to play at the University some weekends, he invariably opens the batting with Dave Carson, who helped BAT win the Premier League this summer.”It’s amazing to see guys like these in your club.”Shirazi, whose ambition is to make the grade as a professional cricketer, won the prestigious Premier League Young Player award after a splendid all-round season with BAT.An ultra-competitive all-rounder, he notched 626 runs last summer, including six half-centuries, at an average of 44.71 and also picked up 15 wickets.”Damian matured a lot as a player during the summer,” praised BAT vice-captain Richard Dibden.”He works very hard at his game and is very keen to learn, which is why he’s spending the winter in a pretty demanding arena in Sydney.”I think he has the fundamentals to do very well and, because he wants to listen and develop his game, he has the chance to go further.”Shirazi, who captained England Schools in the past, has led various Hampshire YC teams, but seems to have missed out on a Hampshire contract next season.”He’ll come back in March an improved and even more determined young player,” Dibden forecast.Bournemouth left-hander Tom Webley is spending the winter on the opposite side of Australia and recently made his WACA First Grade debut for South Perth.”A totally different ball game,”Webley described his debut in the delightful Richardson Park ground alongside the Swan River.”I faced the fastest bowling of my life – I think they put in an few extra paces because I was a Pom,” added Webley, who has also done a day’s 12th man duties forWestern Australia.”I did the 12th man’s job in the Pura Cup game against Queensland at the WACA. It was an amazing experience. The place was humming with big name players, whom I’d previously only seen out here on television.”Hampshire Under-19 hopeful Steven Snell, from Ventnor, who is to join the MCC Young Cricketers staff at Lord’s next summer, is among the runs in South Africa.Although he is currently only playing in the Boland Superjuice Second Grade competition, Snell, 18, has produced a string of high scores for Hermanus.The Island teenager, who could be joining Havant next summer, chalked up 334 runs in his first six knocks, including one score of 159.Former BAT player Steve Rudkin is playing in the same Hermanus side – and been successful with his medium-pace bowling.”I’ve done a good deal of bowling since I came here from Durban, and have had two pretty useful returns – one of 7-81 and another of 6-67.”Unfortunately, my batting hasn’t been quite so successful, but I’m working hard on my technique,” Rudkin confirmed.The other local youngster playing in the Cape, Calmore’s Paul Cass, is finding it hard going in the Hermanus first team, managing only 69 runs so far.

Don't marry a cricketer

Cricket and family life have never been easy bedfellows. A relationship which was at odds long before women were given the vote appears to have reached a crisis of late. Within the game, there has been a spate of well-publicised marital break-ups; outside it, the world is adapting to new rules of engagement between the sexes. The leading players are finding that cricket is making greater demands on them than ever before – and so are their wives.Even though a successful Test career is now shorter than it used to be, at six to ten years, wives and girlfriends are no longer tolerating their lot as cricket widows and virtual single parents. A high-profile husband may have his allure but, once the cachet fades, many are swapping them for men who spend their weekends at home washing the car and mowing the lawn – or even cooking the lunch and bathing the kids.The sheer time taken by the game, especially at weekends, has rarely been popular with families: up to ten hours a day, often seven days a week, if you include journeys and preparation time. Normal folk who receive an invitation to a christening from a professional cricketer have to look at it twice because it tends to be during the week. Add lengthy tours of three or four months to the load and it amounts to a huge strain, particularly on those who have come to expect more of husbands and fathers than previous generations.The problems appear both generational and cultural, with the majority of divorces occurring in England, though a quick check reveals that nowhere is immune. India, to pick a country with different social mores, has its marital casualties: before he was ever accused of match-fixing, Mohammad Azharuddin caused a scandal by walking out of an arranged marriage and settling down with a Bollywood actress. Javagal Srinath’s marriage broke up and Sourav Ganguly’s touched breaking point when he was photographed at a temple with another film star. Other cricketers caught in the full glare of Indian celebrity have been tempted, though many feel it is a honey-trap used by underworld figures hoping to blackmail players into fixing matches.The absenteeism is felt far more in England, where little more than a few weeks separate the hectic six-month home season and the moment wives wave their husbands off on tour in October. It would not be sanctioned now, but on the 1982-83 tour of Australia and New Zealand, Chris Tavaré, who had recently married, brought his wife Vanessa along for the entire 148-day trip. What none of the team knew at the time was that Vanessa had phobias about flying and heights, both of which required heavy sedation. With 23 flights and most of the hotels set in downtown skyscrapers, a lot of sedative was needed. If Tavaré was unhappy he never showed it. It wasn’t until the Fourth Test in Melbourne that he played his first shot in anger.Once a relationship becomes strained, cricket rarely seems able to offer a compromise. Recently, Darren Gough, Graham Thorpe, Mark Butcher and Dominic Cork have all seen their marriages break up while on England duty. In Thorpe’s case, the public saw it too: he flew home from India at the beginning of a Test match in an attempt to save his marriage, appeared on his doorstep in Surrey to talk frankly about it, and later played for England at Lord’s when clearly not himself during a custody battle over his two small children. He retired from one-day internationals with the World Cup looming to spend more time with the children, giving up a sizeable income as a result.Others are doing the sums, and players who spent last winter with both the Test and one-day sides in Australia and the World Cup in South Africa did not see their own beds for 140 nights. Missing the kids growing up is a regret many cricketers cite as a downside of their job, but it is one that most do little about. On the same 1982-83 tour as the Tavarés, the England team were sponsored by JVC. Getting some of their product was part of the deal; while most of the players chose hi-fi, Derek Randall picked a fussy-looking video camera. He said it was "for the missus", so she could film the kids growing up for him.Keith Fletcher’s playing career with Essex and England lasted more than 20 years from tentative newcomer to wise old guru. He was married throughout, and still is, to Sue, and they have two grown-up daughters, Sarah and Tara. Sue doesn’t feel she or the children suffered unduly as a result of his absence. "I certainly don’t look back with resentment, and the girls grew up thinking it was the norm," she says. "I don’t feel it has affected them in any way and they both have a great relationship with their father."An itinerant father can confuse young children. In his diary of the 1997-98 West Indies tour, Phil Tufnell’s last entry tells of arriving back at Heathrow to be greeted by his three-year-old daughter Poppy waving and shouting: "Bye-bye, Daddy."Being away for long periods does not just affect wives and children. Players spending half their year in hotel rooms become lonely and frustrated. When that happens, temptation to stray can be hard to resist and public disclosures of affairs have, in some cases, precipitated the split. Fame has always been a potent aphrodisiac.In England, marital break-up among cricketers has increased steadily, a trend in step with a wider society that has seen the divorce rate treble in a generation. Research recently commissioned by the Lord Chancellor’s department found many of today’s generation "selfishly pursue careers and other interests at the expense of marriage or long-term relationships". Cricketers, like most professional sportsmen, have probably just been selfish for longer.Before the 1990s, the situation was largely tolerated, though not by Phillip DeFreitas’s first wife, who made it clear she considered her own career far more important – thanks to its relative longevity – then her spouse’s. These days, wives with children expect husbands to contribute more than a pay packet. Many cricketers struggle to deliver, and not only because of their absence. Cricket dressing-rooms act as quasi-family units, though ones where responsibility, beyond the immediate task of scoring runs or taking wickets, is often lacking.The laddish bonhomie and sporting drama that come with the job do not prepare players for the raw emotions of life. But while an upset on the pitch can be sorted in the nets or by having a chat with the coach, a failing relationship with a loved one is not so easily remedied, especially when the player is a few time zones away.The fact that players now move county more frequently than in the past means that traditional support networks for wives, such as aunts and grandmothers, may no longer be within easy reach. Where children are settled at school, many simply refuse to move, leaving players to live like the blokes in Men Behaving Badly for virtually the whole season. Part of the problem stems, as one wife of a well-known player confirms, from the women not thinking the whole deal through before they settle down with a professional cricketer. Often they meet their man before he has been picked for international duty. Only when the merry-go-round of touring meets the treadmill of county cricket does the antisocial nature of the whole business hit them.There is a distinct generation gap. Sue Fletcher, a stoic by nature, recalls the England wives of the late 1960s and early 70s being a close-knit group that was more like a self-help collective than a bunch of disillusioned housewives. "We knew what the form was about looking after the kids; our husbands made that clear from day one," she says. "When they were on tour, and they were long tours in those days, the wives used to visit each other back in England. It helped that we all got on well and had children roughly the same age. But we rallied round and got on with it because that’s how it was."In those days, families were allowed to tour but were not encouraged. As at the gentlemen’s clubs of the time, women were seen as a distraction and rather too civilising for cricketers sent to win important battles on foreign soil. The Test and County Cricket Board used to control visits, which players had to pay for, including flights and hotel rooms."I remember going to visit Keith on tour and being allowed to spend 21 nights with him," Sue Fletcher says. "We had to pay every penny and often it took up the entire tour fee so you’d make nothing. Because of those financial constraints, wives on tour, especially with kids in tow, were the exception rather than the rule."These days, there are still limits, but they are less strict. Providing a player is abroad for more than 60 days, the England and Wales Cricket Board allow 30 days’ family provision for players who are in both the Test and one-day sides and 16 for those in one or the other. The board also pay for return flights (in economy) for wives and children under 18, all accommodation, some internal travel and a modest daily meal allowance.The timing of visits is still controlled and has to be agreed in advance by the captain and coach. Usually the period falls around Christmas and New Year, just as the Test series is coming to a climax, a situation that can add to the tension, especially when families come to realise that Daddy is not on holiday too.Occasionally, special cases are allowed. Not wanting to miss the birth of his second child, Nasser Hussain settled his wife Karen and toddler Jacob in Perth just before the start of the 2002-03 tour of Australia, a first for an England captain. He flew out ahead of the team and was given a few days off after the First Test so he could be there for the birth, which was even timed to fit into his schedule: as he chivalrously put it in his newspaper column, "we had her induced". This prompted much huffing and puffing from the old guard, led by Ray Illingworth, who accused Hussain of leaving a sinking ship. Put it down to the David Beckham effect if you like, but such instances are likely to rise, along with the costs, as the board try to keep players and their wives happy.Family visits, even when the cost to players is minimal, are often fraught. Denise Fraser, wife of Angus, was one of the generation of England wives after Sue Fletcher. They have been together since before Fraser became an England regular, fitness permitting, in 1989. They had a son, Alexander, in 1993, a daughter, Bethan, in 1995, and got married in 1996. Denise had mixed feelings about her times on tour. "Before the children were born, trips to the West Indies were great fun, especially when players like David Gower and Allan Lamb were about. But in my experience, we were not always made to feel welcome and, although the wives and kids often lifted morale when we arrived, we also added to the stress."Denise Fraser remembers the 1995-96 tour of South Africa as particularly blighted. England’s tour party grew from 20 to over 70 as families arrived for Christmas in Port Elizabeth and Cape Town. The team manager, Illingworth, was so incensed by the chaos that he blamed it for England’s defeat in the series – the Fifth Test, at Newlands, was the only one with a result."It was disastrous," Denise Fraser says. "We stayed in a city-centre hotel that had no facilities for the kids, and players had to give up their seats for us on the team bus. We felt unwelcome, especially when Illingworth blamed us for the defeat, which was unfair. I remember England winning in both Barbados and Melbourne just after the wives had come out."According to Denise Fraser, the situation could have been avoided with a bit of foresight and planning. The board tacitly acknowledged as much after that tour, when they began to send Medha Laud, the international teams administrator and one of their most senior women employees, ahead of the team, to vet hotels for their suitability.Families on tour need to be looked after. South Africa make their team bus available to ferry them to and from the game, though at different times from the players, or to the shops or sights. Bob Woolmer, South Africa’s coach from 1994 to 1999, got the idea from Kerry Packer’s World Series in the 1970s, where the wives were given a manager who organised shopping trips and sightseeing for them. "Players didn’t have to worry about whether the wife was being looked after or not and could get on with playing cricket," Woolmer says. "You’d then meet up in the evening for supper like couples leading normal lives. It’s simple and effective, but few teams bother."South Africa’s enlightened approach extends further, and players have been allowed to miss tours to spend time with their families. Jonty Rhodes skipped the tour of India in 2000, with the board’s blessing, to be present at the birth of his first child – the first recorded case of a cricketer being given more than a day or two’s paternity leave. In the past, leading England players would pick and choose, as Graham Gooch did when he missed the 1986-87 Ashes tour and half the next winter, but that is almost unheard-of now; after Alec Stewart, who chose not to tour India in 2001-02, mentioned that it would be nice to be around for the Christmas shopping, he faced criticism from the England management. Competition for places is keener and, Bangladesh apart, there are no longer opponents who allow you to get away with fielding a sub-strength side.Australia’s home series are much like a succession of tours, with every game bar one a flight – and maybe a time zone or two – away. And so the Australian board are proactive in getting the families involved. Wives and kids are always invited to the Melbourne and Sydney Tests, where they are put up in apartment-style suites with the players. When the men go overseas, there is usually a dedicated period of two weeks when their other halves can visit, but if a wife wants to come away for the entire trip, she can. On the 2001 Ashes tour, Steve Waugh rented a flat in London for the summer as a base for his wife Lynette, then pregnant, and their two children. Waugh warmed up for the First Test by taking them all over to Disneyland Paris for a few days.The paradox of all the time away from home is that the problems can start when it finishes. A player comes off an arduous tour, expecting to be greeted like a conquering king (or a defeated one), and may find that he no longer fits into the rhythms of home life. "You become so used to their absence," Denise Fraser says, "that Angus would upset my routines when he got back. Suddenly there is another body in the equation and you have to get used to living together again."Let’s face it, most players are a selfish breed who, if not too tired to help out around the house, bring their problems home with them. They are used to getting everything put on a plate and there were times when I couldn’t wait to get him on his way again." Angus is now doing it all over again as cricket correspondent of The Independent. "He seems to be away more than ever."Top-level sport is accompanied by self-analysis and narcissism, which do not lend themselves to the give-and-take required in most long-term relationships. The endless insecurity tends to propel most cricketers up the aisle by their early twenties, before life skills have been acquired. Some, like Imran Khan, David Gower and Mike Atherton, wait until their careers are all but over before starting a family, but they are unusual.Darren Gough, who moved out of the family home last year into a bachelor pad in Milton Keynes, said he felt playing cricket for England was becoming a single man’s game. Given that the international programme has doubled in the last decade, he may be right, but it would be sad if the game’s player-power were further compromised. The hike in matches has come at the behest of television, which bankrolls the modern game. Until that is addressed, something the ICC has yet to do despite the pleas of senior Test captains like Nasser Hussain and Steve Waugh, cricket’s biggest battle will be on the home front.

North ton steers WA to 8-305 at stumps at the WACA

Marcus North made his breakthrough first class century when he protected Western Australia against Queensland quick Ashley Noffke’s wrath on day one of the Pura Cup cricket clash at the WACA.North’s resistance was the main reason the Warriors finished the opening day at 8-305 after a blistering display by the ACB-contracted Noffke.The right handed paceman claimed 4-69 including the prized early scalps of Warriors captain Simon Katich and his deputy Mike Hussey.North chose the perfect moment to notch his maiden ton with Katich (0) and Hussey (2) back in the rooms and only five runs on the board.The upright left-hander defied the Queensland attack for 231 minutes to compile 106, eclipsing his previous first class high of 60.He struck 17 fours and was involved in partnerships of 87 with Murray Goodwin and 89 with Kade Harvey before falling offering a thick edge to Bulls keeperWade Seccombe off Noffke.He said after the game the difficult position the side was in when he strode to the crease had added gloss to his maiden century.”It felt really great. I just tried to go out there and follow the team plan which was to build partnerships,” he said.”The ball just got bigger as the day wore on and to get a hundred along the way was a real bonus.”It’s definitely the highlight of my career, no question.”It’s always good to get a hundred at any level of cricket, but your first first class hundred is what you’re always striving for and I think today it came at a good time and helped WA win the day.”Former Zimbabwe international Goodwin continued his impressive start to the season with a much-needed 68.Goodwin, who smashed 141 in the Warriors’ last game against Tasmania, batted for 204 minutes after coming in with the score 2-5.He became highly-touted Queensland left armer Mitchell Johnson’s (2-47) first Pura Cup wicket when he was caught by Andrew Symonds at point.Bulls veteran Michael Kasprowicz toiled all day but only managed the one wicket, that of last minute call-up Kade Harvey to end the all-rounders plucky resistance.Harvey, who came into the side today to replace virus-ridden all-rounder Brad Hogg, made 31 before he edged Kasprowicz to Jimmy Maher in the slips.

Somerset battle their way to first innings lead

Four Somerset batsmen hit half-centuries to secure a valuable first inningslead in the top three First Division clash at Old Trafford.Mike Burns and Peter Bowler provided a solid pre-lunch platform, then IanBlackwell and Rob Turner led a determined recovery from 199 for five to 385for nine in reply to Lancashire’s 324.Turner top-scored with 72 and although his innings was the slowest, taking238 minutes and 202 balls, it was also the most valuable as he linked upfirst with Keith Dutch then Blackwell to add 138 for the sixth and seventhwickets.Following an unbeaten century in the last game against Essex, it continuedthe wicket-keeper’s return to form after a lean season, and left Somerset ina good position – especially with Lancashire’s captain John Crawley unlikelyto take any further part in the match following a family bereavement.Somerset’s captain Jamie Cox was also missing at the start yesterday forfamily reasons, so Bowler joined Burns to resume their innings on 77 forone.Burns quickly reached an 84-ball 50 with 10 fours and a six, but he was thefirst man to go in the 18th over of the day, a victim of a sharp returncatch by Gary Keedy.Keedy was the pick of the Lancashire bowlers, as he also took three morewickets – all caught by Chris Schofield in the gully – to end the day withfour for 73 from 34 overs.Mark Lathwell was the first and then, after Cox had been bowled bySchofield for 46, Keedy had Bowler snapped up, but only after the veteranhad made a typically patient 65.With the pitch offering plenty of turn, Lancashire would have beenconfident of a first innings lead, but Somerset, and especially Turner, hadother ideas.Dutch hit all but ten in a sixth-wicket stand of 41, then Blackwelldominated the seventh-wicket partnership, with the former Derbyshire spinnerreaching his 50 from 60 balls and going on to 64 with 12 boundaries.He was finally bowled by John Wood with the second new ball but Turnerground on to 72 until he, too, fell to the Keedy-Schofield combination.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus